Guest guest Posted June 19, 2007 Report Share Posted June 19, 2007 Ecki: Tori is just now getting into pretend play, but it took a long time. I would start and just keep working on it. I would work with her on anything you she needs practice with. Tori has alot of issues we deal with daily and try to work on them on a daily basis. One word phrases-trying to get her to use a full sentence; making right choices & wrong choices (this is great-her new teacher thought of this one); sharing; taking turns, etc. Whatever you feel will help her. Liz-Mom to Tori 7 yrs. Pretend play Is it worth the time trying to teach Kayla pretend play? I'd like to expand her play beyond pushing buttons on her musical flashing toys. I tried taking all her musical flashing toys away from her a few months ago, but she mostly just stared at the ceiling, shook her binky in front of her face, or looked at her hands. She just chews on dolls and stuffed animals and just bangs or spins legos and Little People. She's not even interested in puzzles. The school district can't find an ABA provider and I feel really lost as to what I should be working on with Kayla. Ecki Mom to Kayla (DS/ASD, 4/5/04) and Laurie (PDD-NOS, 7/12/01) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 19, 2007 Report Share Posted June 19, 2007 Ecki: Where do you live again? Pretend play Is it worth the time trying to teach Kayla pretend play? I'd like to expand her play beyond pushing buttons on her musical flashing toys. I tried taking all her musical flashing toys away from her a few months ago, but she mostly just stared at the ceiling, shook her binky in front of her face, or looked at her hands. She just chews on dolls and stuffed animals and just bangs or spins legos and Little People. She's not even interested in puzzles. The school district can't find an ABA provider and I feel really lost as to what I should be working on with Kayla. Ecki Mom to Kayla (DS/ASD, 4/5/04) and Laurie (PDD-NOS, 7/12/01) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 19, 2007 Report Share Posted June 19, 2007 Hi Ecki ~ My son is 12. We always worked on playing with him, teaching how to push cars back and forth, playing with the carpets with roads/towns on, trying to teach him how to play. It was very difficult, and forever he just didn't care or get it. He does now, love to line his cars up on the roads on his play rugs, take boxes and I cut " doors " in them and pretend it's a repair shop - he has me write either daddy or uncle on the doors and spends hours lining the cars up at the box to get fixed. I can't say it's a ton of imaginative play, but it's a huge step from where we were - watching videos, pushing buttons, etc. - like you described. Keep working on it - one day Kayla will surprise you! Becky eckidatri wrote: Is it worth the time trying to teach Kayla pretend play? I'd like to expand her play beyond pushing buttons on her musical flashing toys. I tried taking all her musical flashing toys away from her a few months ago, but she mostly just stared at the ceiling, shook her binky in front of her face, or looked at her hands. She just chews on dolls and stuffed animals and just bangs or spins legos and Little People. She's not even interested in puzzles. The school district can't find an ABA provider and I feel really lost as to what I should be working on with Kayla. Ecki Mom to Kayla (DS/ASD, 4/5/04) and Laurie (PDD-NOS, 7/12/01) --------------------------------- Get the Yahoo! toolbar and be alerted to new email wherever you're surfing. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 19, 2007 Report Share Posted June 19, 2007 > > Ecki: Where do you live again? I'm in Sullivan County, New York, on the Delaware River near the NJ/PA border. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 19, 2007 Report Share Posted June 19, 2007 I have a friend who has 2 older boys with ASD. She lives in Highland Mills, NY-think it might be Rockland County...can't remember. Maybe she would know of someone ABA certified. I can email her and check with her. Liz Re: Pretend play > > Ecki: Where do you live again? I'm in Sullivan County, New York, on the Delaware River near the NJ/PA border. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 19, 2007 Report Share Posted June 19, 2007 Why not join Kayla with her flashing toys? Sit on the floor with her with one flashing toy. You press the light and get excited about the color, sound, flashing, whatever and then suggest that she do the same thing. Imitative play will help her laeearn ato play with others. If you are into reading, you might want to look at GREENSPAN and his FLOORTIME books. Severel parents on this list have used this method as a means of reaching their children and teaching them to reach out to them. Sara > > Is it worth the time trying to teach Kayla pretend play? I'd like to > expand her play beyond pushing buttons on her musical flashing toys. I > tried taking all her musical flashing toys away from her a few months > ago, but she mostly just stared at the ceiling, shook her binky in > front of her face, or looked at her hands. She just chews on dolls and > stuffed animals and just bangs or spins legos and Little People. She's > not even interested in puzzles. > > The school district can't find an ABA provider and I feel really lost > as to what I should be working on with Kayla. > > Ecki > Mom to Kayla (DS/ASD, 4/5/04) and Laurie (PDD-NOS, 7/12/01) > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 19, 2007 Report Share Posted June 19, 2007 Hi, this is the same avenue I had persue for my son to what Sara has described. There are some wonderful information under files like " Home Program Guide Overview " . 1. Floor Time (focused time where you follow your child's lead, striving to build a sense of pleasure and flow of interaction as you are wooing, enticing, and flirtatius with your affect and energy). The list goes on at this yahoo group should you join. http://health.groups.yahoo.com/group/Floortime/ Irma,18,DS/ASD Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 20, 2007 Report Share Posted June 20, 2007 Is it worth the time trying to teach Kayla pretend play? Yes, here are some more suggestions in the mean time while the school works around finding and applying ABA. If you ever have a chance to review the Out-of-Sync Child revised by Carol Stock Kranowitz, M.A. and the Out-of-Sync Child Has Fun, Activities for Kids with Sensory Integration Dysfunction. There is a wonderful checklist on http://www.kidfoundation.org/spdchecklist/ Home Activities for Children with Sensory Processing Disorder http://www.spdnetwork.or/aboutspd/homeactivities.html What is sensory integration or sensory processing? Ability to take in information from our bodies and environment, select the useful information, organize it for us in every day life. It is a neurological process in which the brain must integrate the incoming information, and turn messages into responses. (See can of soda, touch it, anticipate weight, smell it, use it.) Responses to stimuli on previous experiences and emotional memories. Senses: Sight: see bright lights, colors, people Hearing: siren, soft music, voices, teacher's directions Taste: hot salsa, sour candy Smell: skunk, flowers Touch (Tactile): information through skin, from head to toe, also mouth. Two functions:protection, helps distinguish between threatening and non-threatening sensations, and discrimination. Tactile sense affects learning, behavior, and communication. Vestibular: information through inner ear about gravity and space, balance and movement, position of head in relation to ground. Information stays in system 4-8 hours, and influences muscle tone, language development and verbal communication. Proprioception: information through muscles, joints, and ligaments, where body parts are and what they are doing. Proprioception tells us where our body parts are, and input stays in system for up to 1 1/2 hours. According to Lucy Jan , PhD, OTR, " the family's quality of life is significantly affected when a child has SI dysfunction. Parents are often blamed for child's misbehavior, for not being able to control the child. What the child does is the behavior that may be sensory based, but may look like intentional misbehavior. You could read up more should you have a chance to review the books mentioned above. Keep a behavior journal: Day and time, behavior observed, situations, what happened just prior? What helped? ABC. Antecedent (what happened before, what was behavior, what was consequence (what happened immediately after behavior). Discover a child's sensory needs (observe child; watch, wait, listen). Identify problems, become a detective (child's needs preferences). What was going on in child's life: hungry, tired, family problems? Ask questions, such as what does ny do at home when....? Report observations, child may be very different in a group. (hyperactivity to person is normal 2 year old behavior to another. Child may not be hyper-sensitive to touch, mother may scold child if he gets dirty, gets clothes messy. Never label child aggressive, when child hits another for getting close to him. Besides applying ABA/VB for my son this is why I share and get carried away writing away anything that could possibly help with something. Implement the sensory diet throughout his day. What can parents and caregivers do to help children all children and especially those who have Sensory Processing problems? Proved a sensory diet of multi-sensory-motor experiences throughout the day. Why do all children (and adults) need a sensory diet as well as a nutritious food? In order to attend (stay alert) and do things throughout the day. There is no cookbook for a sensory diet. Work with an OT who specializes with SPD to develop a sensory diet. Use behavior as a guide to sensory input you will need to provide in sensory diet. Sensory needs change day to day. Write sensory breaks into child's IEP. Think about all seven areas of sensory input throughout the day: hearing, seeing, touching, moving, smelling, muscles, mouth. Provide variety of activities and time to do them. Slowly introduce new activities. Recognize child's abilities not problems. Never " force feed " . Start activity at child's comfort level. Supervise, make sure activity is safe and appropriate for child's development. Build on child's strengths and interests. Imitate child's play Encourage self-help skills Encourage new sensory experiences, movement, touch Recognize child's feelings Set resonable limits: give child sense of control through choices Respect child's needs even if they seem unusal To encourage eye contact, hold object child wants up close to your face Help children transition: turn off lights, sing songs, prepare children to clean up, Hold onto rope if needed to go outside. Let child be at front or back of line if uncomfortable in middle, let child carry something, carry heavy object, allow to swing if needs swing a long time to help reorganize him/herself. Provide healthy crunchy snacks. Provide quiet (safe)place in room: (pillows in corner) Label or shame child. Talk about him/her in front of him/her. Compare him/her to another child. Expect consistency. Force him/her to participate in an activity. Irma,18,DS/ASD Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.